Fr. Thomas Sherman, Son of General William Tecumseh Sherman; Why YouTube Needs Catholics; and More!

The Best in Catholic Blogging

Fr. Thomas Ewing Sherman, SJ, Son of General William Tecumseh Sherman - Donald R. McClarey J.D., Catholic Stand

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly of Catholic Fundraising - Brice Sokolowski, CatholicFundraiser.net

Why YouTube Needs Catholics – Catholic News Agency via The Catholic World Report

Guam, Target of North Korea’s Threats, has a Majority Catholic Population – John Burger, Aleteia

4 Ways to Increase Patience – Charlie McKinney, Catholic Spiritual Direction

Tradition = Vocations – It Isn’t Rocket Science – Fr. Z’s Blog

Review of “Christian Dating Simplified” – Jean Elizabeth Seah, Ignitum Today

Is Suffering Really the Greatest Evil? – Robert Barbry II, epicPew

The True Dignity of Education – Bishop James D. Conley, Southern Nebraska Register

Can a Computer have a Soul? Theology of Science Fiction, Redux 2 – Bob Kurland Ph.D., Reflections of a Catholic Scientist

Dante’s Tribute to St. Dominic – Donald R. McClarey J.D., The American Catholic

Concerning Concelebration, Variety, & Fraternity – Fr. Z’s Blog

“LIT” is One of the Best Catholic Resources Available – Shaun McAfee O.P., epicPew

Heraldry For Parish History – Fr. Guy Selvester, Exarandorum

God Is The First Extremist – Dan Byron, Catholic Stand

Is the Quran Superior Because It Is “Incorrupt”? – Ali ibn Hassan, Catholic Answers Magazine

China and the Uselessness of War – Andrea Gagliarducci, Monday Vatican

For the Most Recent in 'The Best in Catholic Blogging' click on Big Pulpit.

Follow 'The Best in Catholic Blogging' on facebook and twitter.

Read more

Shocker: 72% of Catholics Don’t Go to Sunday Mass?

‘The Sunday Eucharist is the foundation and confirmation of all Christian practice. ... Those who deliberately fail in this obligation...

‘Natural Plan’ — New Couple to Couple League Video Series

The 10 video modules are supported by bonus videos, activities, guidebooks and other resources.

Mother Mary Lange and Other Black Heroines of the Faith

Elizabeth Clarisse Lange entered religious life and lived to be more than 90 years old, dying in 1882.